I like your transparency. Most trainers would not have posted a video like this. We share the same sentiment, that the horse comes first no matter how they place.
Thanks for showing people that this isn’t always what we dream it will be, I have had very good shows and I have had very bad shows and everything in between , it’s part of the process it’s not about trying to be perfect, it’s just doing it and having fun with it until you get to the place you want to be with your horse and that’s rewarding! I once had a friend tell me to ride the horse I have today, not the one I had yesterday or the one I want tomorrow but the horse I have today no matter where she’s at, and that was some of the best advice I have ever gotten ❤
Thank you for showing the rocky parts of seasoning horses. Lots of people don't realize how much goes into making a finished show horse and the beginning always has hiccups.
Thanks a lot for your courage to share the video - it IS an ecouragement to accept their worries and do our best to help them. As you said: progress is more important than perfection!
I appreciate this video so much! As an amateur who took time off to have kids, I’m quite rusty and have been really nervous to get back in the show pen. This is so reassuring!!
Thanks for letting me know! I just had my first baby, and I'm finding out just how much they change life. You'll come back stronger than ever... trust the process. You've got this!
@@zacharias.horsemanship congratulations! That’s so exciting! It’s honestly so refreshing/relatable to see a woman (with children) making great training videos. You’ve helped me SO much already 🩶
I needed to see this! I’m so glad you shared that process with us. It is so encouraging to hear “accept progress not perfection”, for the sake of ourselves and our horses. I love the Ranch Riding videos you guys share. So informative and super helpful.
Thanks sooo much for sharing this video. I have a horse who is anxious in some situations and not in others and I am not a very experienced rider. What I have learned is exactly what you suggested. Give them lots of experiences and make each one as pleasant as possible. I am concentrating on building the pair of us as a team and building my horse’s trust in me that I’ve got his back. It is so hard to work through my own worries regarding his reactions but I am learning! Love your work!
Thank you for sharing! That can be difficult and at times, discouraging. I commend you for sticking with it and continuing to better yourself and your horse. You will achieve great things!
Thank you for this video !!! We will have good shows and bad. We all have to start someplace in ready to get on my 3yr old and start learning ranch riding!!
Thank you so much for sharing. I really needed this. I have a 4 year old that I just started hauling to mounted shooting competitions. He is good with the gun fire but scared of different things outside the ring and won't go forward at times through the courses on day one. Day 2 I can now get him through without too much resistance. It is not a fun experience. I hope he comes out of his fear with more hauling.
I'm confident that he'll progress well in a timely manner. You're doing great! Don't let that one bad experience negatively impact your journey! I had several more rough shows with this gelding before he really started to show solid. It takes more time for some than it does for others. Best of luck!
What a great vid. Thanks for sharing the reality and the lessons learned! And wow, what a gorgeous boy! Looks like he has had a great foundation and will be amazing!! ❤❤❤
@@timandersonhorsetraining 100% 😂 Had a bad day? Just cry it off over some cheese curds and steak. The restaurant is the main reason we school there as much as we do. Lol
Hello, i am a 58 yr.old rider and ihave a 14 yr.old appendix gelding. He is so nervous at the shows. I have taken him to 2 different arenas. We is so anxious about everything, i am not going to large show, just smaller local. I rode him in english, western as well as gymkanas. He spooks at just about everything. Ive worked him on poles on the ground as well as a bridge, he has gotten to know that those are not going to hurt him and we do them fairly good now. This year i will be doing ranch riding as 1 of the events along with the english and western riding. Do you have any advice for me on how to get him to calm down a bit? I will be working on side passing as well. Thank you for your time and the videos.
Thanks for watching! To figure out if you're personally ready to show or not, I'd evaluate the riders in the level and discipline you wish to compete in, and improve your skill set until you feel competent you can ride a pattern at a similar level. Even if you don't feel like you're "there" yet, it can be an extremely valuable learning experience to go show. As far as finding shows goes, they're pretty easy to locate if you show with an association such as AQHA for example, you can look it up online, however it might be a little more tricky if you're looking for all-breed shows. Unfortunately, google isn't very helpful in that area. I would seek out local trainers, or other riders in your equine community, and ask them. Many trainers have a running list of shows they know are coming up and would be happy to share that info. Hope this helps!
It's pretty evident right off the bat if a horse learns and accepts new things quickly or not. For example, I've worked with hundreds of horses in the past; the good ones see something once or twice, might spook at it when it's first introduced to them, but after getting an idea of what it is, they never question it again. An average one might have to see that same obstacle or environment 5-10 times before accepting it and moving on, and the "bad" ones can see it over and over again for the rest of their life and they're always "watchy" and suspicious of it. Those types of horses generally don't make good show horses as they're too instinctive, flighty, and can never relax enough to listen and give you 100% in the show arena.
I like your transparency. Most trainers would not have posted a video like this. We share the same sentiment, that the horse comes first no matter how they place.
Thanks for showing people that this isn’t always what we dream it will be, I have had very good shows and I have had very bad shows and everything in between , it’s part of the process it’s not about trying to be perfect, it’s just doing it and having fun with it until you get to the place you want to be with your horse and that’s rewarding! I once had a friend tell me to ride the horse I have today, not the one I had yesterday or the one I want tomorrow but the horse I have today no matter where she’s at, and that was some of the best advice I have ever gotten ❤
You are 100% right. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for not scraping the video lol. It is super important to know what really goes into a made horse.
Thank you for showing the rocky parts of seasoning horses. Lots of people don't realize how much goes into making a finished show horse and the beginning always has hiccups.
Thanks for being honest about this . They might look an feel great at home , but react entirely differently at a show .
Good insight 😊
Yes, I am glad you showed it. It gave me better ways to work on problems like that. Thanks
Thanks for the feedback, Karen!
Great video
So helpful and helped me feel better about my show this past weekend. I’m encouraged!
Thanks a lot for your courage to share the video - it IS an ecouragement to accept their worries and do our best to help them. As you said: progress is more important than perfection!
You are totally right! Thank you for the comment!
It's definitely an adventure 😅😉
I appreciate this video so much! As an amateur who took time off to have kids, I’m quite rusty and have been really nervous to get back in the show pen. This is so reassuring!!
Thanks for letting me know! I just had my first baby, and I'm finding out just how much they change life. You'll come back stronger than ever... trust the process. You've got this!
@@zacharias.horsemanship congratulations! That’s so exciting! It’s honestly so refreshing/relatable to see a woman (with children) making great training videos. You’ve helped me SO much already 🩶
Ehr gut erklärt. Viele Menschen vergessen dieses Teil zu trainen in einer fremden Umgebung! Danke für dieses tolle Video und der Erklärung 😊
Thank you! I appreciate you watching! 👍
I needed to see this! I’m so glad you shared that process with us. It is so encouraging to hear “accept progress not perfection”, for the sake of ourselves and our horses. I love the Ranch Riding videos you guys share. So informative and super helpful.
Thank you for your feedback! I really appreciate you watching!
THANK YOU! Thank you very much for showing it all the good, the bad and the ugly. It sure got pretty though. You're such a knowledgeable rider!
Thanks sooo much for sharing this video. I have a horse who is anxious in some situations and not in others and I am not a very experienced rider. What I have learned is exactly what you suggested. Give them lots of experiences and make each one as pleasant as possible. I am concentrating on building the pair of us as a team and building my horse’s trust in me that I’ve got his back. It is so hard to work through my own worries regarding his reactions but I am learning! Love your work!
Thank you for sharing!
That can be difficult and at times, discouraging. I commend you for sticking with it and continuing to better yourself and your horse. You will achieve great things!
Thank you so very much for sharing this. How to deal when thing get hard is what so many of us need help with.
Thank you for your video, we've all had days like this and it's realistic thank you again
Horses need patience and understanding and building their confidence is the mark of a good trainer.
Thank you for sharing this! So helpful and encouraging!
Thank you for this video !!! We will have good shows and bad. We all have to start someplace in ready to get on my 3yr old and start learning ranch riding!!
You are absolutely right! Good luck on your journey!
Thank you so much for sharing. I really needed this. I have a 4 year old that I just started hauling to mounted shooting competitions. He is good with the gun fire but scared of different things outside the ring and won't go forward at times through the courses on day one. Day 2 I can now get him through without too much resistance.
It is not a fun experience. I hope he comes out of his fear with more hauling.
I'm confident that he'll progress well in a timely manner. You're doing great! Don't let that one bad experience negatively impact your journey!
I had several more rough shows with this gelding before he really started to show solid. It takes more time for some than it does for others. Best of luck!
Thanks, Jackie. The push that I needed. 💪
You've got this 😉
Thank you! This will help me and give me more confidence as I'm working with my first young horse, as I'm hoping to give her show experience.
What a great vid. Thanks for sharing the reality and the lessons learned! And wow, what a gorgeous boy! Looks like he has had a great foundation and will be amazing!! ❤❤❤
Thank you for watching! He is pretty cool and I can't wait to see how well he does in the future.
Thank you for sharing this!
Thank you for this video.
Thank you!
I've shown NRHA shows in that pen. That is a hard pen for young horses.
You're right about that!
Do you show at the SMRHA reining events there?
@@zacharias.horsemanship yes I did but it was a few years ago. Food was always good though. Lol.
@@timandersonhorsetraining 100% 😂
Had a bad day? Just cry it off over some cheese curds and steak.
The restaurant is the main reason we school there as much as we do. Lol
Hello, i am a 58 yr.old rider and ihave a 14 yr.old appendix gelding. He is so nervous at the shows. I have taken him to 2 different arenas. We is so anxious about everything, i am not going to large show, just smaller local. I rode him in english, western as well as gymkanas. He spooks at just about everything. Ive worked him on poles on the ground as well as a bridge, he has gotten to know that those are not going to hurt him and we do them fairly good now. This year i will be doing ranch riding as 1 of the events along with the english and western riding. Do you have any advice for me on how to get him to calm down a bit? I will be working on side passing as well.
Thank you for your time and the videos.
This was a very helpful video! How do you know if you're ready to show? And where can you find local, beginner shows?
Thanks for watching!
To figure out if you're personally ready to show or not, I'd evaluate the riders in the level and discipline you wish to compete in, and improve your skill set until you feel competent you can ride a pattern at a similar level. Even if you don't feel like you're "there" yet, it can be an extremely valuable learning experience to go show.
As far as finding shows goes, they're pretty easy to locate if you show with an association such as AQHA for example, you can look it up online, however it might be a little more tricky if you're looking for all-breed shows. Unfortunately, google isn't very helpful in that area. I would seek out local trainers, or other riders in your equine community, and ask them. Many trainers have a running list of shows they know are coming up and would be happy to share that info. Hope this helps!
@@zacharias.horsemanship Thank you a ton! That was very helpful!
When you said Cruise tends to see new things and accept them and move on fairly quickly. How is this determined/gauged?
It's pretty evident right off the bat if a horse learns and accepts new things quickly or not. For example, I've worked with hundreds of horses in the past; the good ones see something once or twice, might spook at it when it's first introduced to them, but after getting an idea of what it is, they never question it again. An average one might have to see that same obstacle or environment 5-10 times before accepting it and moving on, and the "bad" ones can see it over and over again for the rest of their life and they're always "watchy" and suspicious of it. Those types of horses generally don't make good show horses as they're too instinctive, flighty, and can never relax enough to listen and give you 100% in the show arena.
Thank you!